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does this raise the value at all

2006-12-28 05:16:58 · 9 answers · asked by jmcic2000 1 in Sports Baseball

9 answers

A card is only worth what someone is willing to pay for it (value), not what any price guide says or what any person not interested in it says. As for raising the value, there has to be more than one person interested in the card (demand). Being Andy Hawkins and Steve Ontiveros, you could put it up for bid for 5 years and only find one person interested in it. Publicity also helps tremendously in the sale of anything because it brings an item to the attention of people that probably didn't know it existed.
The only people that this will be important to are either one who likes the any of the players featured on either side of the card, or a person trying to make a whole set of those miscut cards from 1987 Topps. I have never heard of anyone doing it successfully, but it could definitely be possible. I would place the value of that card between .50 and 1.00. I base that on the age (20 years now), condition of the card, and that fact that most of us threw those away, making that exact card lower in existing quantity. This is all just in my own opinion if I were in the same situation.

2006-12-28 09:03:40 · answer #1 · answered by Kristofer 2 · 0 1

Unfortunately, no, it doesnt raise the value at all. However, if anyone collects either Andy Hawkins or Steve Ontiveros, they may be interested in acquiring the card.

General rule of thumb: any card manufactured between 1985 and 1992 has no value.

Even major superstars with rookie cards, such as Barry Bonds, Jeff Bagwell and Gary Sheffield are not worth much.

For more information, go to www.beckett.com

2006-12-28 05:25:53 · answer #2 · answered by Daeyel 2 · 0 0

Ahhhh, the good ole Topps quality control of the 80s. It's not worth any more than any other common.... if anything, it's usually worth less. I've got tons of em from 86 & 87. Even have a few frontal miscuts.

2006-12-28 14:21:22 · answer #3 · answered by nymetsking 3 · 0 0

1987 Topps were notorious for having misprints and poor condition cards And also the set was over produced

2006-12-28 06:35:34 · answer #4 · answered by teddy w 2 · 1 0

Nope, it's just a misprint, not likely to increase the value of the card.

2006-12-28 05:30:42 · answer #5 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

To be independent i could would desire to have all my attactive touch men lined up in a row and enable me %...I even have somewhat alot of male buddies right here and to easily %. one out could be undesirable judgement on me..feels like a funky factor nonetheless..

2016-12-11 17:41:30 · answer #6 · answered by parenti 4 · 0 0

Unless you find a die hard collector of the players, the card is basically worthless.

2006-12-28 05:36:51 · answer #7 · answered by initmador 3 · 1 0

it's only gonna be worth 4 or 5 dollars

2006-12-28 05:58:29 · answer #8 · answered by Larry 4 · 0 1

I would assume so - go ask a trader, or there's probably even websites where you can look it up

2006-12-28 05:18:40 · answer #9 · answered by Devo 4 · 0 0

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